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The Living Universe: NASA and the Development of Astrobiology (2004)


Author: Dick, Steven J.; Strick, James E
Subject: CHONDRULE; COOLING; HEATING; PETROGRAPHY; NEBULAE; OLIVINE; PLAGIOCLASE; PYROXENES; METEORITIC COMPOSITION
Year: 2004
Language: English
Book contributor: NASA
Collection: nasa_techdocs

Description

In the opening weeks of 1998 a news article in the British journal Nature reported that NASA was about to enter biology in a big way. A ''virtual'' Astrobiology Institute was gearing up for business, and NASA administrator Dan Goldin told his external advisory council that he would like to see spending on the new institute eventually reach 100 million per year. ''You just wait for the screaming from the physical scientists (when that happens),'' Goldin was quoted as saying. Nevertheless, by the time of the second Astrobiology Science Conference in 2002, attended by seven hundred scientists from many disciplines, NASA spending on astrobiology had reached nearly half that amount and was growing at a steady pace. Under NASA leadership numerous institutions around the world applied the latest scientific techniques in the service of astrobiology's ambitious goal: the study of what NASA's 1996 Strategic Plan termed the ''living universe.'' This goal embraced nothing less than an understanding of the origin, history, and distribution of life in the universe, including Earth. Astrobiology, conceived as a broad interdisciplinary research program, held the prospect of being the science for the twenty-first century which would unlock the secrets to some of the great questions of humanity. It is no surprise that these age-old questions should continue into the twenty-first century. But that the effort should be spearheaded by NASA was not at all obvious to those - inside and outside the agency - who thought NASA's mission was human spaceflight, rather than science, especially biological science. NASA had, in fact, been involved for four decades in ''exobiology,'' a field that embraced many of the same questions but which had stagnated after the 1976 Viking missions to Mars. In this volume we tell the colorful story of the rise of the discipline of exobiology, how and why it morphed into astrobiology at the end of the twentieth century, and why NASA was the engine for both the discipline's founding and for its transformation.

Creative Commons license: Public Domain


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Identifier: nasa_techdoc_20050167071
Document-source: CASI
Documentid: 20050167071
Nasa-center: Goddard Space Flight Center; Marshall Space Flight Center
Online-source: http://wayback.archive-it.org/1792/20100128041440/http://hdl.handle.net/2060/20050167071
Original-nasa-rights: Unclassified; Copyright; Unlimited; Publicly available;
Updated-added-to-ntrs: 2009-07-29
Licenseurl: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/publicdomain/
Mediatype: texts
Rights: Public Domain
Identifier-access: http://www.archive.org/details/nasa_techdoc_20050167071
Identifier-ark: ark:/13960/t1gj0cs37
Ppi: 300
Ocr: ABBYY FineReader 8.0

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